
‘From mission to vision’ is how we coined our attempt on Monday evening to figure out how Picnic can grow into a more sustainable community. Having the process of 'growing’ in mind, and wine and curry in our stomachs, we came up with some visual models to help us structure our next steps. The models will help to explain how Picnic can grow, without having too much rules, restrictions and partitions (still thinking bottom-up ;) ). The most important conclusion is to have a common meeting soon to hear your ideas about mission, vision and everything in between.
You may be curious!

[by Svenja]
They say anyone can make music these days, so I decided to join Picnic London’s Ableton Live beginners course. The workshop took place in Goldsmiths’ Orangery. Opinions were divided over whether this place used to be a church, a bunker or a greenhouse filled with citrus trees. Whatever it might have been, it formed an interesting location for a workshop in the midst of New Cross’ hidden gardens, full of windows and ingenious tables that could be transformed into chairs. And of course there was James, the man with many names (Gray Dawn, Strawberry Complexity, Purple James), our Ableton Live instructor for today.
We were five people, all from different countries and with different backgrounds (from mathematics to anthropology) all with the wish to learn more about digital music production. In the first part of the workshop – a crash course for complete beginners – James introduced the program, showed some video’s, gave a live demonstration and taught us the basics. We learned how to record and arrange audio with software instruments and got enough time to experiment and ask questions.
Then we had lunch. After we filled our bellies with halloumi, enchilada’s, humus and falafel we were ready for the second part in which we learned how to design custom samplers and effects to use with controllers. James taught us how to use guitar, the Novation Launch Pad and even a Wii controller! On top of that he demonstrated how the already countless possibilities of the program can be extended by connecting to other programs such as MaxMSP and Reason.
… as soon as I got home I started practicing what I just learned. I’ve spent the whole weekend finding new sounds, experimenting with a variety of effects and analyzing songs that I love.
It was amazing to have a full day of teaching; I felt like being in school again and as soon as I got home I started practicing what I just learned. I’ve spent the whole weekend finding new sounds, experimenting with a variety of effects and analyzing songs that I love. There are so many new sounds to discover. Suddenly my life is filled with cosmos soundscapes, distorted heavens and analog bongo’s. I even managed to construct some really bad loops.
By now I’ve reached the point where I had to remove the Ableton launch icon from sight, ask a friend to hide my midi keyboard and swear I won’t touch it until I finish my dissertation. (I already broke my promise while writing this…)
Thanks James for this beautiful Picnic!
[by Louise]
Yesterday Ricardo and Frederico organised number three in a series of discussions centered round the topic of creative collaboration. Together with some 15 people we formed a nicely diverse group, something essential for effective collaboration. We started off with a very open discussion about the different meanings of ‘creative collaboration’ that were present. We broke down the main topic is its literal constituents 'co’ (together) and 'labor’ (work) signalling the need for joint effort, indicated the divergent aspect of 'creative’ versus the convergent character of 'collaboration’, spotted the trend of collaboration fuelled by online connectivity and touched upon the idea 'centralisation in decentralisation’ put forward by James Surowiecki in his book the Wisdom of Crowds.
Our group struggled with two different approaches that seem very related. The first examplified by Lars von Trier’s Gesamt, where one director sets the rules and indiviuals are invited to send in their footage to be filled in this skeleton structure. The second based on real life interaction, mutual feedback and collective decision making, much like the current event itself. The first one doesn’t require contributors to ever meet in person, yet in my eyes clearly shows creativity by shared effort. Perhaps crowd-sourced projects like this (life in a day, a day, the Johnny Cash project) are more accurately described by 'collective creativity’?
The opening discussion went far and wide, so it was good to focuss slightly on the topic of leadership in creative collaboration, while the other part of the group was biting into ownership in the same setting. Leadership flows, as we noticed by the way our conversation was steered in different directions in our initially leaderless group. For me it shows how leadership can be an emergent property arising from the local interactions within a group. Apart from that, it is also context-dependent, as leaders can step up when the setting is right for their expertise. A final important conclusion we came to was that much leadership lies in the structure that determines the interaction within a group. Leadership can then be embodied by a single police officer (or benevolent dictator for that matter) making everyone stick to the structure or it could be dispersed over every member of the group.
In the third part of the session I pitched Picnic. It was a good excercise to share the idea with people outside of the direct surrounding our network that is still mainly based around Goldsmiths. During the brainstorm that followed we tried to identify the next steps necessary for a sustainable growth of the community that we have already. Critical questions involved “Why do we want more people to join?” and “Who is Picnic for?”. Besides these fundamentals we were a bit future-oriented for the goal of identifying next actions while we focussed on features of the online platfrom to support our activity.
When we left the centre for creative collaboration, about an hour after the scheduled time, I tought it was great to see how we matched up form and content. We used the aggregation of each other’s skills to learn more about the very process we were involved with. More of this soon please! Read more details of the Picnic brainstorm here.
